When it seems all the changes that can be made, have been made, it's probably time to change some more.

A shot of New Orleans VooDoo Coach Derek Stingley shaking his head in disgust on the JumboTron above the New Orleans Arena floor summed up the season. It was shortly after the Georgia Force took a 28-7 lead when Maurice Purify caught a 5-yard touchdown pass in the back of the end zone, beating the VooDoo secondary once again.

"I have just put this team together, and normally when I do coach I usually have guys that have been with me for at least two or three years, " Stingley said. "There are some plays that if they would just buy into the defense, we could win. There's a lot of thinking that has to go into the defense, but this is a safe defense that I put in. There's entirely too much thinking that goes on."

Brett Elliott threw for 217 yards, but most of that was in the first half and did to New Orleans what Jacksonville, Orlando and Tampa have done to the VooDoo secondary. Now, heading into the bye week at 0-4, Stingley faces a tough decision -- go with what he has, or find new guys to cover receivers.

"We're four games into the season and it's a shame, " he said. "I don't want to bring in new guys because I may be starting all over."

But that could be insignificant as Stingley realizes he may have to do something as this week progresses. The bye week can offer Stingley a little time in which to make changes.

On the other side of the ball, protection issues continue to plague New Orleans. The Force registered five sacks and pressured quarterback Danny Wimprine into four interceptions.

"I feel sorry for Coach Sting, I've been with him for several years and we've always went to the playoffs, " wide receiver P.J. Berry said. "But when we can't block -- and that's not just the linemen, that's the fullback and receivers -- all of us, Danny can't get rid of the ball. I made two or three errors out there tonight, so I'm not saying I'm perfect by any means."

BERRY STIFLED: Georgia held Berry, the VooDoo's receiver/kick returner, to just 172 yards, which was down from his 242 yards per game average.

Most of it was the fact Berry couldn't shake loose from the wall of Force defenders on kickoffs.

"In their kickoff coverage they broke down at the 15, they weren't running down and trying to tackle me in the end zone, " Berry said. "They would break down at the 15 so I wouldn't have any lanes or alleys to go through.

"It wasn't like my kick return team wasn't doing anything wrong, it was them just stopping and waiting for me. I'll probably see that the rest of the year now."

QUICK HITS: Derrick Lewis caught his first touchdown of the season on a 12-yard pass from Wimprine in the third quarter. ... Carlese Franklin was the team's leading receiver with 89 yards on seven catches and a touchdown. ... Georgia only had 238 yards of total offense; the reason they were able to score as well as they did was four of their five interceptions occurred in VooDoo territory. ... Aaron McConnell and Benji McDowell had two sacks each for Georgia.